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Over my dead body : unearthing the hidden history of America's cemeteries / Greg Melville.

Athenaeum of Philadelphia - Circulating Collection GT3203 .M44 2022
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Melville, Greg, author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Cemeteries--United States--History.
Cemeteries.
Death--Rituals.
Death.
Physical Description:
258 pages : illustrations, portraits ; 24 cm
Place of Publication:
New York : Abrams Press, 2022
Summary:
"A lively tour through the history of US cemeteries that explores how, where, and why we bury our dead. The summer before his senior year in college, Greg Melville worked at the cemetery in his hometown, and thanks to hour upon hour of pushing a mower over the grassy acres, he came to realize what a rich story the place told of his town and its history. Thus was born Melville's lifelong curiosity with how, where, and why we bury and commemorate our dead." -- Amazon.
Contents:
Cannibals, a coffin, and a captain's staff : Colonial Jamestown's original graves reveal America's distinctly uncivilized beginnings
Pilgrim's progress? : To trace America's long, ongoing history of desecrating the Native dead, start at Plymouth Rock
...Or give me death : Jewish cemeteries are America's first and most enduring public expressions of religious liberty
which makes them targets for intolerance
Where the bodies are buried : Southern plantation owners concealed the evidence of their moral crimes by hiding the bones of the enslaved
Out of the churchyard into the woods : Rural-style cemeteries transformed America's landscape, turning burial grounds into tree-filled tourist destinations
Underground art : The Brooklyn cemetery that turned New York into America's cultural capital
Death comes equally to us all : racial segregation in American cemeteries is still very much alive
The tonic of wilderness : How Emerson and Thoreau turned a new cemetery into the country's first conservation project
A cemetery by any other name : Central Park, built on burial grounds, has become Manhattan's most active repository for human remains
Four score and seventy-nine years ago : The Civil War opened the gates to the capitalism of corpses
and death in America has never been the same
Sweet and fitting to die for one's country : How Arlington National Cemetery's success as a monument to war made Americans too eager to fill it
Keeping up with the corpses : The way cemeteries set the most for America's suburban subdivisions
Lasting impressions : Tombstones in old boot hill graveyards keep alive the lost story of Chinese immigrants in the nineteenth-century American West
The Disneyland of graveyards : How a Los Angeles cemetery corporatized mourning in America
We didn't start the fire : Cremation now outnumbers burials in America and has surprisingly led some dying cemeteries to rise from the ashes
Leveraging buried assets : Facing an existential threat from DIgital Immortality, cemeteries are staging a gritty fight for survival
Back to nature : Green cemeteries return America's burial practices to the country's earliest days.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 233-255).
Local Notes:
Athenaeum copy: Hagen fund bookplate.
ISBN:
1419754858
9781419754852
OCLC:
1299143782

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